Diana Kingsmill Wright (24 December 1908 – 24 January 1982) was a Canadian athlete, journalist and activist.[3]
Diana Kingsmill Wright | |
---|---|
Born | Diana Kingsmill 24 December 1908[1] Ottawa, Ontario |
Died | 24 January 1982(1982-01-24) (aged 73)[2] |
Occupation | athlete, journalist, environmentalist |
Nationality | Canadian |
Period | 1920s-1970s |
Spouse | Victor Gordon-Lennox (1932 - bef. 1940) J. F. C. Wright (1944-1970) |
Diana Kingsmill Wright was born in Ottawa, Ontario, 24 December 1908. She was the daughter of Naval Service of Canada admiral Sir Charles Kingsmill,[3] She was raised and educated in Canada and England.
In her youth, she was a competitive figure skater, who was a winner of the Devonshire Cup.[4] She was later a member of the Canadian alpine skiing team at the 1936 Winter Olympics,[5] and competed despite having suffered a broken hand.[6]
She married Victor Gordon-Lennox, the son of British politician Walter Gordon-Lennox, in 1932.[7] In this era she was a friend of actor David Niven,[3] who wrote about her in his autobiography The Moon Is a Balloon.[8]
She returned to Ottawa in 1940 after separating from Gordon-Lennox.[9] She remarried to historian J. F. C. Wright in 1944, in the Parliament Hill office of J. S. Woodsworth,[10] and moved with Wright to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.[3] Active in the Saskatchewan chapter of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, the Wrights became co-editors of Union Farmer, the newspaper of the Saskatchewan Farmers' Union, in 1950.[3] Wright committed suicide in 1970.[10]
In the 1960s, she was active in Voice of Women, and leased the Kingsmill family summer home on Grindstone Island to the Society of Friends to serve as a Quaker retreat centre and an institution for peace studies.[11] She later served as editor of Environment Probe,[3] and served on an advisory committee to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation on its coverage of agriculture and farming issues.[3]